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I'm 13 years old and would like to prepare for college by writing as many book reports. I read a lot of books and whenever I finished the book I'm cuurently reading, I would like to write a book report on it. How do I write a college level book report?

How should I start it off?

2006-11-18 11:27:33 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

I know I'm still young but would love to know how. I'm going to high school next year and want to impress the teachers.

2006-11-18 11:28:10 · update #1

11 answers

There is no such thing as a "college level book report." In college you don't write book reports, you write "papers." A book report is usually a mindless summary exercise to show you completed your reading assignment. A paper is a scholarly exercise of literary criticism intended to share insights you've gained from reading. A college paper might follow the development of themes or compare and contrast characters in one or more works.

If you want to write about your reading, that is great. The more you write, the more skillful you will become. Do NOT summarize the book. Write about your impressions: what did or didn't you like about the characters, what themes were developed and how were they developed, what did you learn or what did the author try to teach you and did you agree with the author, and how was the book similar or different to other books you have read are a few examples of topics. Ask a librarian to help you find critical essays written about books you have read. Read them carefully so you can begin to understand how literary criticism is written. If you can, find critical readers to comment on your writing. You don't want people who tell you how good everything is, you want people who are willing to say what is wrong and help you write better. Even at the highest level it is always possible to improve. Finally, keep reading. Read Shakespeare, Milton, and other literature that is considered "great." The more well-written material you read, the better you own writing will be.

2006-11-18 15:26:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Don't worry about trying to impress high school teachers. Honestly, I haven't written a single book report since about 7th grade (I'm currently finishing my fourth year of undergraduate work in a literature-based drama program). In my experience, writing about a book/short story/poem/play for a college course almost always means analysis in some context- cultural, historical, political, etc. While you're reading a text, consider what the themes of the text are (and no, Sparknotes cannot actually tell you this. For one, the better part of what you'll be reading in college classes isn't there, and for two, Sparknotes "analysis" tends to go for the ideas about the text that have been dealt with over and over. It's boring). Also consider when and where the text was written- New York in 1950 and 17th century Paris were completely different worlds. And who wrote it- a man or a woman, someone rich and university educated, or someone who grew up poor? How might what the text is saying fit into the world in which it was written? How is it still relevant today? Or if it's not still relevant, why isn't it? How does it fit into the current world?

(And thank you for typing "a lot" as two words. I'm a writing tutor, and I've gotten to a point where I want to rip out my hair every time I see it typed as one word. ^_^*)

2006-11-18 14:47:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Write A Book In 24 Hours!

2016-07-22 23:40:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Whoa! STOP ALL THE HATING (that's for your respondents)!!!

Read, read, read. A book report isn't to impress a teacher, it's to prove that you read the book. Basically, a book report, whether in high school or college, consists of two parts: a summary of the story, and your thoughts about the story. Did the story move you? Why or why not? What characters did you like? Did the author use symbolism?

If you really want to learn to think like this, try reading a book, then get the Monarch notes and read them to see if you missed anything. That'll let you know hte kinds of things to look for in the next book you read. Then do it again. By the third or fourth time you do this, you should start to see the way critical (meaning: thoughtful) readers approach book reports. You'll either either enjoy it yourself and continue reading... and writing, or you'll be bored and move on to something you *like*, which is what school is all about: finding what out you like and doing it.

2006-11-18 12:20:10 · answer #4 · answered by Dr_Adam_Bricker 3 · 1 0

Writing a school level book report is a awfully completely different task from what you probably did on similar assignments in highschool. Here is what a vital review ought to appear as if, at the side of some tips for writing a high-quality paper.

College Book Reports
Chances area unit, you’ve written over one book report throughout your faculty career. And if you’re taking any English categories in school, you’ll doubtless be needed to try and do a number of additional. In college, though, book reports area unit slightly completely different than the sort most highschool academics expect. this sort of assignment additionally goes by one or two completely different names, as well as “book review” and “critical review.”

High school book reports area unit largely concerning summarizing the book, proving you’ve truly scan it. a school level book report could be a very little additional complicated. rather than simply explaining what happened within the book, you’ll be needed to supply a appraisal of its contents. This isn’t as arduous because it sounds, and it isn’t a lot of completely different from the opposite essays you’re wont to writing in English class. Follow the recommendation below, and you’ll be ready to show out a thoughtful and college-worthy report.

The outline
The first and most vital factor to try and do once writing a school level book report is to really scan the book. it'd be tempting to use one thing like Spark Notes, however that won’t provide you with the data you would like to put in writing an efficient critique. thus scan the book fastidiously, and if potential provide yourself a while to replicate on that before beginning your paper.

2014-06-07 21:03:15 · answer #5 · answered by Rahim Babu 2 · 0 0

Get a college level eduction
Read a book
Analyze it
Write a report on the book

Sorry but there isn't a short cut. Work in HS to expand your knowledge base and technical competence at reading and writing. When you get to college, it will come naturally.

2006-11-18 11:57:51 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

1

2017-02-17 17:03:59 · answer #7 · answered by Anthony 4 · 0 0

write college level book report: https://bitly.im/c14/-how-do-u-write-a-college-level-book-report

2015-05-02 00:56:48 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

learn MLA form, search for it online. also, try some college websites. teachers have their own pages, and some will probably have grading rubrics posted.

2006-11-18 11:30:06 · answer #9 · answered by kate 4 · 0 0

good

2015-03-04 00:57:51 · answer #10 · answered by Jonny N 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers